I've never seen the accent on the "e" like that before. I thought it was from Italian and doesn't have an accent? Not too sure.

Anyway I would say the main disadvantage is that it could take a prohibitively long time to get an answer to required precision; for example, getting 5 decimal places (with, say, 99% confidence) might a quadrillion trials depending on what you're dealing with.

June 3rd 2010, 02:27 PM

Moo

Quote:

Originally Posted by undefined

I've never seen the accent on the "e" like that before. I thought it was from Italian and doesn't have an accent? Not too sure.

Monte-Carlo indeed is Italian. And there's indeed no accent.
French deformation :D

Yeah, the main problem is the precision. To get a 10 times better precision, you have to make 100 times more simulations, and that can be quite a lot... (because the central limit theorem gives a convergence speed in )